The Tyger vs. The Lamb Blake thought that a poet was a prophet and the poetry that the poet wrote was a prophecy. Through his theory, reintegration of human life was possible. In Blake’s Songs of Innocence and Experience, it seems that there are opposing views of God in the poems of The Tyger and The Lamb. The speaker in each poem shows their view of God himself. In The Tyger, it seems like the speaker is wondering if God can be both loving and angry, where as the speaker in The Lamb seems to say that God is meek and mild like a lamb.
Blake’s view is presented in a way through these two poems that says that we have to get beyond the stage of experience in order to understand the true nature of the Divine. In The Lamb, God is represented through Divine love. The speaker says: Little Lamb, I’ll tell thee, Little Lamb, I’ll tell thee! He is called by thy name, For he calls himself a Lamb; He is meek & he is mild, He became a little child… The speaker is explaining how God is just like the Lamb. God is in no way different than the Lamb himself.
He is meek and mild just like a little child, and has the same ideas about life that the Lamb does. Blake makes it clear that his view on God in this poem is not what it the right way to think. This is something the people during the Romantic period must think about. Towards the end of this period, they had a crisis of faith that everyone could not deal with.
This made Blake very popular.
The Term Paper on Words Of God Blake One Man
Every poem has an element of God in it's words. Just as God spoke through the writings of Peter or Matthew, elements of His word are in the beautiful themes in poetry. In this essay, I will compare the poems of William Blake and William Wordsworth with the written Word of God, in five poems: The Lamb, The Chimney Sweeper, The Tyger, My Heart Leaps Up, and London 1802. My aim is to show that the ...